Claiming Indigenous Land Rights from the Bottom Up: Dispossession of the Ogiek in Mau Forest, Kenya
CLASSIC Program Serving the Community Well
Climate Change and the Warming Politics of Autonomy in Greenland
Climate Change From An Indigenous Perspective: Key Issues and Challenges
Climate Change in the Pacific: A Matter of Survival
Closing the Gap: Prime Minister's Report 2018
Commission is Best Forum for Finding Truth About Schools
Commission Process Opportunity to Move Ahead
Common Table Report: Based upon Discussions among Canada, British Columbia and the First Nations Participating at the Common Table
Communication Most Effective Tool In Police Kit
Community Crisis Planning for Prevention, Response, and Recovery: First Nations Service Delivery Model
Comparative Governance Structures Among Aboriginal Peoples in Canada
Discusses the self-government issues of legitimacy, power and resources, by using examples of current agreements. The article breaks the areas down in terms of: basic principles, rights through treaties, federal-provincial division of power, status of lands, legislative powers, and funding.
Related Material: Fact Sheet.
Con(TEXT) 1: A Project Fact (A) Update for 26 April 2018
Plain language explanation of legal principles involved in analysis of R. v. Stanley, the case in which Gerald Stanley, a Saskatchewan farmer, was charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of a 22-year-old Cree man, Colton Boushie, and was subsequently acquitted.
The Concept of Indigenous Peoples in Asia: A Resource Book
Concluding Observations of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women: Canada
Conditions of Release for Federal Women Offenders
Conference Draws Attention to Cases of Missing Women
Confronting Canada’s Indigenous Female Disposability
Considerations for Meaningful Collaborations with Tribal Populations: The Tribal Collaboration Working Group Report to the All of Us Research Program Advisory Panel
Consolidated Report of the Implementation Committee: Gwich'n Comprehensive Land Claim Agreement: 2009/10 - 2014/15
Constituting an Osage Nation: Histories, Citizenships, and Sovereignties
Constitutional Reconciliation of Education for Aboriginal Peoples
Contested Place: Religion and Values in the Dispute, Burnt Church/Esgenoôpetitj, New Brunswick
Continuums of Worth: A Newspaper Deconstruction of Missing Canadian Women
The Cost of Doing Nothing: Implications for the Manitoba Health Care System
Courts Poor Venue to Resolve Treaty Land Claims
Cramming Jails Proven Failure at Fighting Crime
Criminal Jurisdiction in Indian Country: The Solution of Cross Deputization
Criminal Law on the Aboriginal Plains: The First Nations and the First Criminal Court in the North-West Territories, 1870-1903
[Crisis in Truth and Reconciliation Commission]
The Crown’s Constitutional Duty to Consult and Accommodate Aboriginal and Treaty Rights
Cultural Genocide in Canada? It Did Happen Here
Cultural Healing: Native American Activists Say Boarding School Abuses Harmed the Health of Generations
A Culturally-Informed and Culturally-Safe Exploration of Self-Injury Desistance in Aboriginal Offenders: Perspectives of Staff and Offenders
Culturally Responsive Schooling for Indigenous Youth
Culture as Prevention: Assisting High-Risk Youth in the Omaha Nation
The Cypress Hills: An Island by Itself
Dale Turner. This is Not a Peace Pipe: Towards a Critical Indigenous Philosophy
Daleen Kay Bosse (Muskego): March 25, 1979-May 19, 2004
Data Resources and Challenges for First Nations Communities: Document Review and Position Paper
Data Sovereignty and the Tribal Law and Order Act
Deadly Embrace: From State Sovereignty to Cooperative Agreements in a Public Law-280 State
Deal? Or No Deal? Explaining Comprehensive Land Claims Negotiation Outcomes in Canada
A Deal's a Deal - Kelowna Accord 1 (National Chief Fontaine)
Dealing with Residential School Survivors: Reconciliation in International Perspective
Deaths of Children puts Child Welfare System in Hot Seat
Reports on an investigation by Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, into the deaths of four children in British Columbia which questions the child welfare system.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.5.